The historical background of terrorism and its follow-up step enter the permanent corridor of our conscious life with the terrible tragedy of September 11, and our response as society is multifaceted. There are shocks, sorrows, anger, and other emotions that we do not fully understand, we do not know to explain. When we look for explanations, our government, the media, and the university saints try to help clarify what we have experienced. We are told that our innocence disappears, the Third World War has begun, and not the one the world sees, but the new terrorism in a more deadly form.
The best book on terrorism is "history of terror" written by Walter Laqueur more than 20 years ago. Because it places terrorism in an appropriate historical context and now avoids widespread mental errors. Let's say you are dealing with something. Innovative and unique. The word "terrorism" dates back to the French Revolution and has been accepted by various murderers, anarchists, assassins, intellectuals, and political and religious movement leaders, both large and small. From Robespierre to the Russian anarchists of the 19th century, from Sorel to Yasser Arafat, we believe that all these people can scare and threaten their enemies to achieve by ordinary political means I will. Terrorism is not new as it will realize political goals, it is not uncommon
Throughout this article, Nunberg showed the timeline of the word "terror". The use of this historical background shows how the earliest form of the word was returned. I wrote when Nunberg stated that in 1793 Robespierre 's terror rule "terror" was said to convey a high emotion that you might feel when you were absolutely confronted. "Wonderful" has become a top of the general. However, now the original form of this word revives and symbolizes the endless struggle against terrorism. Nunberg emphasizes this by explaining another change in our language. We changed to "war" without using the word "war". It dates back to the 20th century and used "war" to counter social evil. There is never a complete victory